GENESEO, N.Y. — A replica of the Roman goddess missing
from the State University of New York at Geneseo's library will be unveiled
Friday afternoon for the first time in public.

The media is invited to attend the unveiling, which will be
held at 3:30 p.m. at Milne Library on the campus.

The statue has been draped since her May 23 "return" to
campus. The Minerva statue was last seen in 1951, when she graced the library
in the Old Main building when Geneseo was a normal, or teacher training,
school. It was widely speculated that Minerva — who would have turned 99
this year — was razed, along with Old Main, and was perhaps even used as
rubble to fill a parking lot.

This winter, Milne Library officials launched a campaign to
find the statue, even going as far as plastering wanted posters — some
asking, "Have you seen this goddess?" — around campus and in the village
in the hope that faculty and staff, nearby residents or alumni would have some
clue as to where Minerva might have been hiding.

After reaching dead ends, library officials concluded that
Minerva's widely reported demise was by all accounts more than just a rumor.
So, they commissioned a Massachusetts gallery to create a replica of the
goddess of wisdom and patron of warriors.

The old statue weighed 350 pounds and stood 6'2". The new
statue is 8'3" and weighs approximately 100 pounds.

The Class of 2005 donated the cost to bring Minerva home
through its senior challenge fund-raising program. A plaque will be placed on
the base of the statue in honor of the class of 2005's generosity.